264, Ex. 3213, Dt. 110 1022 2862).—6. counted it (his implicit trust in the character of Yahwe) as righteousness] 1 Mac. 252. (Hebrew characters) is here neither inherent moral character, nor piety in the subjective sense, but a right relation to God conferred by a divine sentence of approval (see We. Pss., SBOT, 174).
This remarkable anticipation of the Pauline doctrine of justification
by faith (Ro. 43. 9. 22, Gal. 36; cf. Ja. 223) must, of course, be understood
in the light of OT conceptions. The idea of righteousness as dependent
on a divine judgment ((Hebrew characters)) could only have arisen on the basis
of legalism, while at the same time it points beyond it. It stands later
in theological development than Dt. 625 2413, and has its nearest
analogies in Ps. 10631 245. The reflexion is suggested by the question
how Abram, who had no law to fulfil, was nevertheless 'righteous';
and, finding the ground of his acceptance in an inward attitude towards
God, it marks a real approximation to the Apostle's standpoint. Gu.
(161) well remarks that an early writer would have given, instead of
this abstract proposition, a concrete illustration in which Abram's faith
came to light.
7-21. The covenant.—7, 8. The promise of the land,
Abram's request for a pledge (ct. v.6), and the self-introduction
of Yahwe (which would be natural only at the commencement
of an interview), are marks of discontinuity
difficult to reconcile with the assumption of the unity of the
narrative. Most critics accordingly recommend the excision
of the vv. as an interpolation.
So Di. KS. Kraetzschmar, Gu. al. Their genuineness is maintained
by Bu. De. Bacon, Ho.; We. thinks they have been at least worked
over. The language certainly is hardly Yahwistic. The (Hebrew characters) (7) is not
a sufficient ground for rejection (see Bu. 439); and although (Hebrew characters) in
a J-context may be suspicious, we have no right to assume that it did
not occur in a stratum of Yahwistic tradition (see p. 239 above). But
(Hebrew characters)—(Hebrew characters) is a decidedly Deuteronomic phrase (see OH, i. 205): on (Hebrew characters),
see on v.2. On the theory of a late recension of the whole passage
these linguistic difficulties would vanish; but the impression of a change
of scene remains,—an impression, however, which the interpolation
theory does not altogether remove, since the transition from 6 to 9 is
very abrupt. Bacon's transposition of the two sections of J is also
unsatisfactory.
(Hebrew characters). The construction with (Hebrew characters) is usual when the obj. of faith is God (Ex. 1431, Nu. 1411 2012, Dt. 132, 2 Ki. 1714, 2 Ch. 2020, Ps. 7832, Jon. 35): (Hebrew characters) only Dt. 923, Is. 4310.—(Hebrew characters)] second obj. acc. The change to (Hebrew characters) (Ps. 10631) is unnecessary.